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15 free salon and spa CAD blocks in DWG and DXF in 2026

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By Saumyajit Maity · Published 19 Feb 2025 · Updated 10 Jun 2026

A salon or spa floor plan is a tight choreography of stations, wash points and circulation, where every styling chair needs working room and every treatment area needs privacy and access. This collection gathers 15 free salon and spa CAD blocks in DWG and DXF — styling chairs and stations, wash basins, mirrors and treatment furniture — drawn to scale and free for personal and commercial use, with no signup or watermark.

The blocks are mostly plan footprints, because a salon is laid out in plan: you arrange the styling stations along a mirror wall, set the wash units near the plumbing, and keep a clear path for staff and clients between them. Scaled blocks let you prove the room holds the stations you need with comfortable spacing.

The pack suits interior designers, architects and salon owners planning hair and beauty salons, barbershops, nail bars and spa treatment rooms. Pair the salon furniture with the mirror, basin and seating blocks you draw around it, and keep everything on a furniture layer for a clean layout.

What's in the salon and spa pack

The 15 blocks cover the core salon kit: styling chairs and stations seen in plan, wash and backwash basins, mirrors and mirror units, reception and waiting seating, and treatment-room furniture for spa and beauty areas. Plan footprints are what you arrange into the layout; where an elevation is included it dresses a presentation view of a station or a mirror wall.

The set lets you build a real salon zone by zone — a styling row along the mirrors, a wash bay, a reception, and quiet treatment rooms — rather than dropping generic chairs into a box. Mixing the station and seating types is what gives a salon plan its working credibility.

Salon station dimensions and spacing

Plan with ranges and with the working space around each station. A styling chair plus its mirror station needs enough width for the stylist to move around the client and enough depth in front of the mirror to step back. Wash basins seat a reclined client, so allow for the leg projection and staff access behind. Reception and waiting seating follow normal seating footprints with circulation in front.

The spacing between styling stations is the key dimension: stations are set far enough apart that two stylists can work back-to-back without colliding, with a clear aisle for clients and staff to pass. Drawing the scaled chairs and wash units into the plan shows immediately whether the room holds its target station count with comfortable spacing.

How to lay out a salon from the set

Fix the constraints first — the plumbing wall for the wash bay, the entrance and reception, the mirror wall for styling. Insert the blocks with INSERT or by dragging the DWG, set INSUNITS to millimetres so they land at true size, and array the styling chairs evenly along the mirror line to keep the station spacing consistent.

Place the wash basins near the plumbing, set the reception and waiting seating by the entrance, and lay out the treatment rooms as enclosed quiet spaces away from the busy styling floor. Keep everything on a furniture layer so you can freeze it for a services plan and thaw it for the layout. Check the aisle between back-to-back stations stays clear for staff and clients to circulate.

Per-zone notes: styling, wash, reception and treatment

The styling row is the heart of the salon, usually set along a mirror wall with stations evenly spaced; the working space around each chair is what governs how many stations a wall holds. The wash bay groups the backwash basins near the plumbing, with room behind for staff to stand and recline the client comfortably.

Reception and waiting anchor the entrance, setting the first impression and holding clients before their appointment. Spa and beauty treatment rooms are separate, quieter enclosures — for massage, facials or nails — that need privacy and their own access. Zoning these functions clearly, rather than mixing them, is what makes a salon both efficient for staff and pleasant for clients.

Plan layout and presentation

Salon furniture lives mostly in plan, where the stations, wash bay, reception and treatment rooms are arranged and the circulation is proven. The plan is what shows the room works as a salon and what a fit-out contractor and the owner read.

For client presentations, an elevation of the mirror wall or a dressed reception communicates the look and brand, but the working layout decisions are all made on the plan. Keep the furniture layer light enough that the circulation and the zone boundaries stay legible, since clear movement is what makes a busy salon floor function during a full appointment book.

Where salon and spa blocks are used

These blocks appear in hair and beauty salon fit-outs, barbershop layouts, nail bars, spa and wellness centres, and hotel salon and treatment suites. They pair with the seating, mirror and basin blocks in the accessories and furniture categories, and sit alongside reception and waiting furniture in the wider drawing.

Free and licence-clear, the blocks suit student interior and hospitality projects as well as production fit-out drawings. One salon block carries from the concept layout through to the coordinated salon plan, so the stations and circulation stay consistent from first sketch to fit-out.

Free download

Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Are the salon and spa CAD blocks free for commercial use?+

Yes. All 15 salon and spa blocks download free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, watermark or attribution, cleared for commercial project use.

How far apart should salon styling stations be in CAD?+

Space styling stations so two stylists can work back-to-back without colliding, with a clear aisle for clients and staff to pass. Drawing the scaled chairs into the plan confirms the spacing works.

Are the blocks plan footprints or elevations?+

They are mostly plan footprints, since a salon is laid out in plan, with elevations included where available for presentation views of stations and mirror walls.

Will the DWG files open in free CAD viewers?+

Yes. The files target AutoCAD 2004 and later, opening in current AutoCAD, AutoCAD LT, BricsCAD, DraftSight and free online DWG viewers.

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